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Shanghai - Volvo Cars and its Chinese owner are gearing up to export more premium cars to world markets.

Outlining its latest strategy Wednesday (November 2), Volvo unveiled upgraded versions of its upscale S90 sedan range, which will be manufactured entirely in China for export, signaling growing confidence in its Chinese production base.

'Super luxury' version

Design touches on some of the S90 models also highlighted Volvo's focus on the vital Chinese auto market. Most notably, a "super luxury" version replaces the front passenger seat with a touchscreen console, with space to store shoes underneath, a feature clearly aimed at China's chauffeur-driven executives.

Volvo and its parent company Geely also announced plans for a factory to make compact cars based on a new shared platform, including vehicles for Geely's just-launched "connected car" brand, Lynk & Co.

Volvo added a long wheelbase version of its top-of-the-line S90 sedan as well as the "super luxury" Excellence edition aimed at China's chauffeured business class, who typically desire a more spacious backseat. The S90 Excellence's "lounge console" with its touchscreen monitor on retractable arms takes all of the front passenger side. The car comes with a panoramic sunroof and handmade Swedish crystal glasses.

Samuelsson said the two new versions "will be the most luxurious cars ever produced in China" when Volvo's two-year-old plant in Daqing, Heilongjiang province starts making the S90 range in the coming months.

"The fact that these cars will be exclusively built in China for the global market demonstrates the quality of our Chinese factories," he said.

Another Volvo factory in Chengdu in central Sichuan province produces midsize S60 cars, which the company started exporting last year to the United States.

With only a few thousand vehicles dispatched annually from China, "the number of Volvos going to the US is still small. But the important takeaway is that shipping to the US means Volvo China operations have achieved world-class quality," said Michael Dunne, president of Hong Kong-based investment advisory firm Dunne Automotive .

Geely Chairman Li Shufu's decision to give Volvo management ample independence has paid off, he added. Last year Volvo operating profits tripled and vehicle sales surpassed half a million units for the first time.

Dunne added: "Now German luxury makers are taking a closer look at their coming challenger."

Volvo's factories in Gothenburg, Sweden and Ghent, Belgium will continue to make sedans, hatchbacks and sport-utility vehicles in all three model ranges. It's also building a plant in South Carolina to make midsized vehicles.